BISC 230Lgx Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Henry Molaison, Anterograde Amnesia, Retrograde Amnesia

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Anterograde amnesia: can"t remember anything ater the injury. Could learn new skills, but couldn"t remember that he learned it o. Hippocampus: responsible for encoding declaraive memories (not storing) Declaraive memories: facts acquired through learning that answer what quesions (requires hippocampus, stored in the cortex) o. Semanic memory: generalized declaraive memory (can"t remember where you learned it) Procedural memories: skills shown by performance rather than recall - answers how quesions o. Skill learning: (needs basal ganglia, motor cortex, and cerebellum) Delayed non-matching to sample task - key and ball covering food test. Declaraive memory depends on medial temporal (mt) lobe funcioning. Has short-term memories, but cannot make new declaraive long-term memories. Amnesiac have impaired free recall, but perform just as well as controls with priming. A neutral simulus (condiioned simulus) + a simulus that evokes a response (uncondiioned simulus) --> will respond to neutral, condiioned simulus as a condiioned response.

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